Case Summary (G.R. No. 243237)
Facts of the Accident
On June 13, 2013, at around noon, Catalina P. Mendoza was crossing Sta. Maria Road when she was sideswiped by the 14-wheeler prime mover and subsequently found under the vehicle near its left front wheel; she sustained multiple injuries and was pronounced dead at Ciudad Medical Zamboanga. The prime mover was returning to San Roque after delivering merchandise to a customer. Petitioners’ counsel sent a demand letter seeking reimbursement of P470,197.05, moral damages of P250,000.00, and attorney’s fees; ES Trucking offered P200,000.00 plus P100,000.00 from insurance, which the heirs refused.
Procedural History — Criminal and Civil Filings
A criminal case for Reckless Imprudence resulting to Homicide (MTCC Criminal Case No. 50864 (1-6564)) was filed against the driver. Separately, petitioners filed a civil complaint for quasi-delict against ES Trucking in RTC, Civil Case No. 6538. The MTCC convicted Timtim and imposed an indeterminate sentence (minimum arresto mayor to maximum prision correccional); that decision became final and executory on February 2, 2016. The RTC dismissed the civil complaint for insufficient evidence on April 21, 2016; the Court of Appeals affirmed on February 15, 2018. The CA denied reconsideration on September 25, 2018.
Lower Courts’ Findings
RTC: Found no evidence of recklessness attributable to the driver, noting testimony that the truck was in its proper lane and concluding Catalina was likely attempting to cross while traffic was moving; dismissed the quasi-delict action. CA: Affirmed that criminal conviction does not automatically establish employer civil liability; held employer may defend by proving due diligence in selection and supervision, found insufficient evidence of negligence (no witness saw the moment of impact, police investigator saw no evidence of negligent driving), and characterized the death as a tragic accident.
Issues Presented to the Supreme Court
(1) Whether the driver was negligent such that employer ES Trucking is vicariously liable under Article 2180 of the Civil Code; (2) Whether the civil quasi-delict complaint may proceed independently of the criminal action; (3) Whether ES Trucking is a common carrier requiring extraordinary diligence; (4) Whether ES Trucking exercised due diligence in selection and supervision of the driver; and (5) Whether the heirs are entitled to damages.
Supreme Court on Driver Negligence
The Court found Timtim guilty of reckless driving causing Catalina’s death, aligning the civil finding with the MTCC’s criminal finding admitted in appellate briefs. The Court rejected reliance on the truck occupying the right lane as dispositive of non-negligence and emphasized that a prudent driver should have observed mirrors and applied brakes upon seeing a pedestrian already in the second half of the road.
Civil Action Independence from Criminal Proceedings
The Court reiterated that civil actions for quasi-delict proceed independently of criminal proceedings and require only a preponderance of evidence (Rules of Court, Rule 111; Arts. 31, 2177 of the Civil Code). Thus the civil claim against the employer may be adjudicated independently regardless of the criminal outcome.
Common Carrier Status of ES Trucking
The Court concluded ES Trucking acted as a truck-for-hire (common carrier) on the evidence: the trailer bore a yellow plate (public utility) while the prime mover bore a green plate (private), testimony showed the vehicle transported customers’ cargo, and admission that ES Trucking applied to include the unit in its LTFRB franchise but had no valid franchise at the time. The Court invoked precedent (De Guzman) that liability under civil provisions governing common carriers arises when one acts as a common carrier, irrespective of possession of a certificate of public convenience; failure to obtain regulatory permits cannot be used to evade civil liability.
Due Diligence in Selection and Supervision
Under Article 2180, the employer is vicariously liable unless it proves the diligence of a good father of a family in selection and supervision. The Court found ES Trucking’s hiring and supervisory practices deficient: it required only a professional license and job application, performed unverifiable verbal background checks without documentary proof, did not require criminal or NBI clearances or TESDA Driving NC III certification (as required by DOTr DO No. 2011-25 for heavy-truck drivers), and did not provide transport management or road safety training. The Court also found supervisory failures in permitting use of a
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Procedural Posture and Relief Sought
- Petition for Review on Certiorari under Rule 45 assailing the Court of Appeals Decision dated February 15, 2018 in CA-G.R. CV No. 04394-MIN and the Resolution dated September 25, 2018 denying Heirs' Motion for Reconsideration.
- The CA had affirmed the Regional Trial Court (RTC) Decision dated April 21, 2016 dismissing the complaint for damages (Civil Case No. 6538, RTC Zamboanga City, Branch 12).
- Petitioners: Heirs of Catalina P. Mendoza; Respondent: ES Trucking and Forwarders.
- Relief sought in initial demand letter (February 19, 2013): reimbursement of actual expenses P470,197.05, moral damages P250,000.00, and attorney’s fees equivalent to 10% of total claim.
- ES Trucking offered financial assistance P200,000.00 plus third‑party insurance proceeds P100,000.00; heirs declined and insisted on claimed amounts.
- Certification to File Action issued April 24, 2013 after settlement failed; criminal case for Reckless Imprudence resulting to Homicide filed in MTCC (Criminal Case No. 50864 (1‑6564)); civil quasi‑delict complaint filed separately in RTC (Civil Case No. 6538).
Facts of the Incident
- Date and time: June 13, 2013, around noontime.
- Victim: Catalina P. Mendoza, walking along Sta. Maria Road after visiting a lotto outlet.
- Location of impact: junction of Gov. Ramos Street and Sta. Maria Road, Zamboanga City; victim at center of road attempting to cross second half when sideswiped by a 14‑wheeler prime mover truck.
- Result: Catalina picked up from under the fuel tank behind the front left tire; brought to Ciudad Medical Zamboanga and pronounced dead.
- Injuries documented: multiple abrasions and contusions in clavicle area; lacerated cheek wound; multiple abrasions on abdomen; multiple rib fractures.
- Certificate of Death immediate cause: “Cardio‑Pulmonary Arrest Sec. to Vehicular Accident.”
- Truck’s mission at time: returning to San Roque after delivering kitchenware to customer Suani Enterprises.
Vehicles, Registration, and Ownership Details
- Prime mover truck: body number 5; green plate no. NAO 152 (registered as private).
- Trailer attached: yellow plate no. JZA163 (signifying public utility registration for trailer).
- Vehicle registered under ES Trucking and Forwarders; Sumarni Asprer Ruste identified as sole proprietor.
- Testimony and documentary exhibits show a mixture of plate colors (prime mover green; trailer yellow), admission that application for inclusion in Certificate of Public Convenience was filed but franchise/confirmation not granted and franchise later cancelled.
- LTFRB Order (July 29, 2013) indicates failure to register the subject vehicle “FOR HIRE” within one month of approved franchise; certificate granted April 27, 2011 was canceled on February 3, 2012.
- Evidence of tampering while case pending: original body number altered from “5” to “15” and the vehicle apprehended on July 19, 2013 while attempting to deliver goods, contrary to undertaking to preserve vehicle’s original condition.
Driver and Employer Hiring/Supervision Practices
- Driver: Clin Timtim (Timtim), holder of professional driver’s license no. 104‑99‑069007; restricted to driving articulated vehicle category; admitted to driving the subject vehicle.
- ES Trucking’s hiring practices: required only job application form and professional driver’s license; no documentary proof of prior employment submitted by driver; background verification limited to phone call to prior employer and application form; no routine requirement for NBI, police, or barangay clearances; no record of requiring TESDA certification or attendance in transport management/road safety seminars.
- No evidence that Timtim possessed TESDA Driving National Certificate (NC) III as required by DOTr DO No. 2011‑25 for heavy truck drivers as an additional requirement for issuance of a certificate of public convenience.
- Testimony extracts show inconsistent and unclear responses regarding registration with LTFRB, issuance of yellow plates by LTO, and whether vehicle had franchise.
Criminal Proceedings and Outcome
- MTCC Criminal Case No. 50864 (1‑6564) for Reckless Imprudence resulting to Homicide tried against driver Clin Timtim.
- MTCC Decision dated December 15, 2015 found Timtim guilty and sentenced him to an indeterminate penalty: minimum four (4) months and one (1) day of arresto mayor to maximum three (3) years, six (6) months and 21 days of prision correccional.
- Entry of Judgment issued March 10, 2016 certifying the MTCC decision became final and executory on February 2, 2016.
- Timtim applied for probation and was released.
RTC Ruling (April 21, 2016)
- Dispositive: case dismissed for insufficient evidence and want of cause of action; no costs.
- RTC findings: no evidence of recklessness attributable to the driver; police witness PO3 Marlon V. Agbalos testified truck was in proper lane at time of incident; RTC concluded victim likely sideswiped on left side and was not run over by front tire; surmised victim may have attempted to cross while truck already in motion and traffic moving on both sides; no finding of negligence or recklessness; vicarious liability claim against ES Trucking fails.
Court of Appeals Ruling (February 15, 2018)
- CA affirmed RTC dismissal.
- CA reasoning: criminal conviction does not automatically establish civil liability of employer; employer can defend by proving due diligence in selection and supervision of employees; allowing criminal conviction to conclusively determine civil liability creates an absurd result prejudging quasi‑delict action.
- CA treated judicial notice of the MTCC judgment’s finality as discretionary.
- CA concluded insufficient evidence of negligence because (1) none of petitioners’ witnesses saw the moment of impact; (2) ES Trucking’s witnesses saw no pedestrian crossing in front of truck; (3) no indication of warning or obstacle; (4) police investigator saw no evidence of negligent driving.
- CA characterized death as a terrible accident, possibly attributable to being in the wrong place at the wrong time, and emphasized that both drivers and pedestrians must exercise caution.